Title: International Human Resource Management (IHRM) and Labor Relations
1International Human Resource Management (IHRM)
and Labor Relations
2IHRM Labor Relations Topic Outline
- IHRM
- definition, complications, strategic significance
- International Managerial Staffing Needs
- scope of internationalization
- centralization vs decentralization of control
- staffing philosophy
- Recruitment Selection
- expatriate issues and repatriation
- Labor Relations
- labor relations around the globe
- labor relations and globalization
3Definition
- Human resource management (HRM) is the set of
activities directed at attracting, developing,
and maintaining the effective workforce necessary
to achieve a firms objectives. Recruiting and
selecting employees, providing training and
development, appraising performance, and
providing compensation and benefits are all part
of HRM.
4Complications for IHRM compared to HRM
- International HR managers face a more complex
task than their domestic counterparts because
differing cultures, levels of economic
development, and legal systems among countries
may require companies to adapt their hiring,
firing, training, and compensation programs to
each country.
5Complications for IHRM compared to HRM
- Firms must decide whether managers will be
selected from the home country, from the host
country or from third countries. - Training and development in an international firm
may be more complex than in a domestic firm. - Compensation systems must be adapted to meet the
needs of each countrys labor market.
6Strategic Significance
- The international HRM process involves
understanding the strategic context of HRM within
the firms overall strategy, recruiting and
selecting appropriate managerial personnel,
providing necessary training and development,
assessing performance, providing compensation,
and evaluating managerial retention and turnover.
7International Managerial Staffing Needs
- There are two broad categories of staffing needs
facing international human resource managers (1)
recruiting, training, and retaining managerial
and executive employees and (2) recruiting,
training, and retaining nonmanagerial employees
such as blue-collar production workers and
white-collar office staff.
8International Managerial Staffing Needs
- For nonmanagerial employees, international firms
normally adapt their compensation and performance
appraisal systems to local laws, customs, and
cultures. The text notes for example, that while
U.S. workers appreciate feedback from an
appraisal system, German workers are resentful of
feedback.
9International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Most firms begin their international expansion
with small-scale exporting. Thus, during a
firms initial foray into foreign markets a
home-country citizen, who may or may not have
special training in working in foreign markets,
usually manages the firms international
transactions.
10International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Later when the firm establishes an international
department, subsidiary managers (usually host
country citizens) report to the vice-president of
the international division (usually a home
country citizen).
11International Managerial Staffing Needs
- As a firm further expands its operations in a
global organization, a team of managers with
expertise in the firms product lines, necessary
functional skills, individual country markets,
and the firms global strategy is usually
assembled.
12International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Firms that centralize decision making at
headquarters typically favor home-country
managers while firms that decentralize decision
making to the subsidiary level often employ host
country nationals. Since most companies do not
fall at one extreme or the other, most companies
have a combination of both home and host country
managers.
13International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Managers can be hired from three groups parent
country nationals host country nationals and
third country nationals. Parent country
nationals (PCNs) are residents of the
international businesss home country who are
transferred to one of its foreign operations.
14International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Communications and coordination with corporate
headquarters is typically facilitated when PCNs
are employed because they normally share a common
culture and education background with
headquarters staff.
15International Managerial Staffing Needs
- PCNs may however, lack knowledge of local laws,
culture, economic conditions, social structure,
and political processes. Moreover, they may be
expensive to relocate and maintain the host
country. In addition, because a host country may
impose restrictions on the number of employees
that can be transferred, a company may not have
the freedom to hire whom it wants.
16International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Host country nationals (HCNs) are residents of
the host country, and are the most common choice
for mid-level and lower-level jobs. Employing
HCNs is popular because they are already familiar
with local laws, culture, and economic
conditions.
17International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Also, HCNs may be cheaper than PCNs because a
firm can avoid the costs such as relocation
expenses that are associated with PCNs. - However, an HCN may not be familiar with the
firms corporate culture nor its business
practices.
18International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Third country nationals (TCNs) are citizens of
neither the firms home country nor of the host
country. TCNs are most likely to employed in
upper-level or technical positions. TCNs and
PCNs are collectively known as expatriates
(people working and residing in countries other
than their native country).
19International Managerial Staffing Needs
- An ethnocentric staffing model may be used to
help a firm choose among HCNs, PCNs, and TCNs for
various positions. The model indicates that PCNs
staff most higher-level positions.
20International Managerial Staffing Needs
- Other firms may follow a polycentric staffing
model where, based upon the belief that HCNs know
the local market best, the use of HCNs is high. - Finally, firms that want to hire the most
qualified person for the job, regardless of the
individuals nationality, follow the geocentric
staffing model.
21Recruitment Selection
- The skills and abilities needed by international
managers fall into two general categories those
needed to do the job and those needed to work in
a foreign location.
22Figure 20.2 Necessary Skills and Abilities for
Intl Managers
23Recruitment Selection
- Today, as businesses globalize, the market for
executive talent is also globalizing. Top
management teams are increasingly diverse in
their members. - While most MNCs do not hire new college graduates
to take foreign positions immediately, many hire
graduates with the intention of sending them
abroad in the future.
24Recruitment Selection
- The selection process in international firms is
particularly important because of the high cost
of expatriate failure. Expatriate failure is the
early return of an expatriate manager to his or
her country because of an inability to perform in
the overseas assignment. The cost of expatriate
failure ranges between 40,000-250,000.
25Recruitment Selection
- Expatriate failure rates may be as high as 20-50
percent in many U.S. companies, higher than for
either European or Japanese companies.
26Recruitment Selection
- Managers sent on foreign assignments may
experience culture shock, a psychological
phenomenon that may lead to feelings of fear,
helplessness, irritability, and disorientation.
Acculturation typically proceeds through four
phases.
27- Because an expatriate suffering from culture
shock may be less effective and productive,
companies typically take measures to limit its
effects such as providing pre-departure language
and cultural training.
28Figure 20.3 Phases in Acculturation
29Recruitment Selection
- In most cases, expatriates fail to complete their
foreign assignments because of an inability of
the expatriate manager, or his or her spouse and
family, to adapt to the new location.
30Recruitment Selection
- Firms are now beginning to pay more attention to
repatriation--bringing a manager back home after
a foreign assignment has been completed.
Individuals that successfully adapted to the
foreign environment may experience culture shock
upon returning to their own country.
31Recruitment Selection
- Regarding non-cultural issues leading to
success or failure overseas, managers tend to be
more successful in foreign assignments when 5
conditions are met - 1. they can freely decide whether or not to
accept a foreign assignment - 2. they have a realistic understanding of the
new job and assignment
32Recruitment Selection
- 3. they have a realistic expectation of a
repatriation assignment - 4. they have a mentor in the parent firm who
will look out for their careers - 5. there is a clear link between the foreign
assignment and the managers long-term career
path.
33Recruitment Selection
- Compensating expatriate managers can be a complex
process because factors such as differences in
currency valuation, standards of living,
lifestyle norms, and so forth must be taken into
consideration.
34Recruitment Selection
- A cost-of-living allowance may be given to
managers to offset differences in the
cost-of-living in the home and host countries. A
hardship premium (also known as a foreign service
premium) may be paid to mangers who accept
assignments in relatively unattractive locations.
35Recruitment Selection
- Special benefits packages that may be provided to
expatriate managers include housing, education,
medical treatment, travel to the home country,
and club memberships. The text provides specific
examples of how and why firms provide these
benefits.
36Recruitment Selection
- In many cases the total compensation package
offered to an expatriate is much more lucrative
than the package offered to his or her local
counterpart.
37Recruitment Selection
- The simplest and most useful advice for those
considering an overseas assignment is to
carefully weigh the flip side of all the issues
just mentioned, from your perspective. And, to
not take anything for granted about how
conditions will be when you arrive (doing ones
homework pays).
38Labor Relations
- A countrys laws, culture, social structure, and
economic conditions may impact labor relations.
The text notes for example that the role of
unions varies greatly among countries. In the
U.S. membership in unions has been steadily
decreasing, but over half the worlds workforce
outside the U.S. belong to unions.
39Labor Relations
- Unions in the European countries tend to be
aligned with political parties, but in Japan are
created and run by the firms themselves. In fact,
labor relations in Japan are so cordial that
strikes are rare.
40Labor Relations
- The premise of industrial democracy--the belief
that workers should have a voice in how
businesses are run--is an important influence in
labor unions in Europe. In fact, in Germany an
approach called codetermination provides for
cooperation between management and labor in
running a business.
41Labor Relations
- The EUs implementation of its social charter (or
social policy) whereby employment conditions and
practices will be standardized throughout the
community is addressing issues such as maternity
leave, job training, and pension benefits.
42Labor Relations
- Finally, labor unions have had their bargaining
power reduced by globalization. However, there
is very little coordination between unions in
different countries to counter that reduction in
bargaining power.
43IHRM Labor Relations Topic Outline
- IHRM
- definition, complications, strategic significance
- International Managerial Staffing Needs
- scope of internationalization
- centralization vs decentralization of control
- staffing philosophy
- Recruitment Selection
- expatriate issues and repatriation
- Labor Relations
- labor relations around the globe
- labor relations and globalization